Section 1512 of the Code of Georgia, which provides that:
"Any person, master, or commander of a ship or vessel bearing
toward any of the ports or harbors of this state, except coasters
in this state, and between the ports of this state and those of
South Carolina, and between the ports of this state and those of
Florida, who refuses to receive a pilot on board shall be liable,
on his arrival in such port in this state, to pay the first pilot
who may have offered his services outside the bar, and exhibited
his license as a pilot, if demanded by the master, the full rates
of pilotage established by law for such vessel,"
conflicts with the Constitution of the United States, and is
annulled and abrogated by the provision in Rev.Stat. § 4237,
that
"No regulations or provisions shall be adopted by any state
which shall make any discrimination in the rate of pilotage or
half-pilotage between vessels sailing between the ports of one
state and vessels sailing between the ports of different states, or
any discrimination against vessels propelled in whole or in part by
steam, or against national vessels
Page 118 U. S. 91
of the United States, and all existing regulations or provisions
making any such discrimination are annulled and abrogated."
A vessel owned in Philadelphia and running between Philadelphia
and Savannah was licensed as a coastwise steam vessel. The master
held a license as pilot under Title LII Rev.Stat. The owners
employed S (a Savannah pilot also licensed under the laws of the
United States to conduct vessels over Tybee Bar and up the Savannah
River), as their regular pilot to conduct the vessel through those
waters, with pay from the time of leaving Philadelphia. T, licensed
as a pilot under the laws of Georgia, spoke the vessel off Cape
Romain, before any other pilot spoke it, and tendered his services
to conduct it over the bar and up the river, and they were refused.
Subsequently S met the vessel under the general arrangement and
piloted it over the bar and up the river.
Held that
pursuant to the provisions of Rev.Stat. §§ 4401, 4444,
the vessel, both when T tendered his services and when it passed
over the bar and up the river, was under the lawful control and
direction of a pilot licensed under the laws of the United States,
and could not be required to take a pilot licensed under the
provisions of the laws of Georgia.
If a clause in a statute which violates the Constitution cannot
be rejected without causing the act to enact what the legislature
never intended, the whole statute must fall.
The case is stated in the opinion of the Court.
MR. JUSTICE MATTHEWS delivered the opinion of the Court.
This was an action at law, begun by the defendant in error in a
magistrate's court in Chatham County, Georgia, against the
plaintiffs in error to recover $93.16, claimed to be due under the
pilotage laws of Georgia, for inward pilotage on account of the
steamer
Saxon, of which the defendants were owners, the
vessel having been spoken by the pilot while she was bearing toward
the port of Savannah, and his services offered outside of Tybee
Bar, and refused, the vessel having arrived in port piloted by
another Savannah pilot, who spoke her and entered on the discharge
of his duties as pilot on the same day but subsequently to the
tender by the plaintiff below of his services.
There was a judgment in favor of the plaintiff below in the
Page 118 U. S. 92
magistrate's court for the amount claimed, which was reversed on
appeal by the Superior Court of Chatham County, which judgment was
in its turn reversed by the Supreme Court of Georgia, which ordered
judgment to be entered for the plaintiff below. To reverse this
judgment this writ of error is brought.
The case was submitted and decided upon an agreed statement of
facts, as follows:
"It is agreed between the parties to the above-entitled cause
that the same shall be tried on appeal in the Superior Court of
Chatham County on the following state of facts before the court,
without a jury:"
"That the steamship
Saxon is a licensed coastwise steam
vessel engaged in the trade between Philadelphia and Savannah, and
belongs to Spraigue, Soullee & Co.; that on the 9th day of
August, 1881, she was engaged in a voyage from Philadelphia,
Pennsylvania, to Savannah, Georgia, and that S. W. Snow was her
master; that said master was duly licensed, under title 52 of the
Revised Statutes of the United States, as master of a steam vessel,
and as a pilot also, but that his certificate as a pilot did not
include Tybee Bar and Savannah River, but that his certificate was
for the Atlantic Coast, and that his certificate as master and
pilot was issued last November; that said steamship
Saxon
was spoken by plaintiff off Cape Romain on the 9th day of August,
1881, and his services were tendered to said master of said
steamship
Saxon as a pilot for Savannah River and Tybee
Bar, and that at the time his said services were offered there was
no pilot for Tybee Bar or Savannah River on board said steamship,
and that said plaintiff was the first pilot who spoke said vessel
on her said trip to Savannah. It was further admitted by counsel at
the hearing that Philadelphia was the home port of said steamer
Saxon, and that the captains and masters of the Ocean
Steamship Company's steamers, whose home port is Savannah, have
each a license from the United States authorities at Savannah to
pilot their vessels up and down the Savannah River over and from
the bar to the city; that said pilot was duly commissioned by the
commissioners of pilotage for the Savannah River and Tybee Bar, and
was also duly commissioned
Page 118 U. S. 93
by the United States inspectors, to conduct steam vessels over
Tybee Bar and up Savannah River, and within that limit; that
Thompson went out to meet the
Saxon, being advised of her
departure from Philadelphia, and his services were refused; that
the defendant had procured the services of Walter W. Smith, a pilot
who was duly licensed for the Savannah River and Tybee Bar by the
commissioners of pilotage, and who was also duly licensed by the
United States to conduct steam vessels over Tybee Bar, and up
Savannah River, and had notified the captain of said steamship
Saxon to stop at the Martin's Industry Lightship, and take
said Walter W. Smith on board to pilot said steamship over Tybee
Bar and up Savannah River; that said Walter W. Smith was employed
as the regular pilot of steamer
Saxon and was under pay
from time said vessel left Philadelphia; that said pilot was taken
on board said steamship on [the] 10th day of August off the
Martin's Industry Lightship, and he piloted the said vessel to the
City of Savannah and has continued in the employ of said vessel
from that time until the present time as pilot; that Cape Romain is
on the South Carolina coast north of Charleston, and that Martin's
Industry Lightship is north of Tybee Bar and off the South Carolina
coast; that Walter W. Smith was in Savannah when the
Saxon
left Philadelphia, and was not piloting the
Saxon when she
was spoken by the plaintiff, but met her afterwards, and was taken;
that said steamship
Saxon drew seventeen feet six inches
of water, and that, according to rates of pilotage for Tybee Bar
and River of Savannah, $93.17 was a proper charge for piloting a
vessel of such draft up to Savannah city."
The claim of the defendant in error for pilotage, arising upon
the foregoing case, is based on § 1512 of the Code of Georgia,
which is as follows:
"Any person, master, or commander of a ship or vessel bearing
toward any of the ports or harbors of this state, except coasters
in this state, and between the ports of this state and those of
South Carolina, and between the ports of this state and those of
Florida, and who refuses to receive a pilot on board, shall be
liable, on his arrival in such port in this
Page 118 U. S. 94
state, to pay the first pilot who may have offered his services
outside the bar, and exhibited his license as a pilot, if demanded
by the master, the full rates of pilotage established by law for
such vessel."
And the claim is undoubtedly well founded if this provision of
the state law is enforceable consistently with the Constitution of
the United States and the acts of Congress on the same subject
passed in pursuance thereof. It is therefore contended by the
plaintiffs in error that this provision of the Georgia Code is
invalid on the ground that it is inconsistent with the laws of the
United States regulating the same subject.
Section 4235 Rev.Stat. enacts that
"Until further provision is made by Congress, all pilots in the
bays, inlets, rivers, harbors, and ports of the United States shall
continue to be regulated in conformity with the existing laws of
the states respectively wherein such pilots may be, or with such
laws as the states may respectively enact for the purpose,"
but it is also enacted by § 4237 Rev.Stat. that
"No regulations or provisions shall be adopted by any state
which shall make any discrimination in the rate of pilotage or
half-pilotage between vessels sailing between the ports of one
state and vessels sailing between the ports of different states, or
any discrimination against vessels propelled in whole or in part by
steam, or against national vessels of the United States, and all
existing regulations or provisions making any such discrimination
are annulled and abrogated."
The section of the Georgia Code above quoted does contain such
discriminations as are prohibited by § 4237 Rev.Stat. It
excepts from its operation "coasters in this state," and "between
the ports of this state and those of South Carolina," and "between
the ports of this state and those of Florida." It was held,
however, by the Supreme Court of Georgia in the case now before us
that so much of the section as makes these illegal exceptions may
be disregarded, so that the rest of the section as thus read may
stand upon the principle that a separable part of a statute which
is unconstitutional may be rejected, and the remainder preserved
and enforced. But the
Page 118 U. S. 95
insuperable difficulty with the application of that principle of
construction to the present instance is that, by rejecting the
exceptions intended by the legislature of Georgia, the statute is
made to enact what confessedly the legislature never meant. It
confers upon the statute a positive operation beyond the
legislative intent, and beyond what everyone can say it would have
enacted in view of the illegality of the exceptions. We are
therefore constrained to hold that the provisions of § 1512 of
the Code of Georgia cannot be separated so as to reject the
unconstitutional exceptions merely, and that the whole section must
be treated as annulled and abrogated by § 4237 of the Revised
Statutes.
We are also of opinion that the claim for pilotage in the
present case is defeated by other provisions of the Revised
Statutes. Section 4401 provides that
"All coastwise seagoing vessels and vessels navigating the Great
Lakes shall be subject to the navigation laws of the United States
when navigating within the jurisdiction thereof, and all vessels
propelled in whole or in part by steam and navigating as aforesaid
shall be subject to all rules and regulations established in
pursuance of law for the government of steam vessels in passing, as
provided by this title, and every coastwise seagoing steam vessel
subject to the navigation laws of the United States, and to the
rules and regulations aforesaid, not sailing under register shall,
when under way, except on the high seas, be under the control and
direction of pilots licensed by the inspectors of steamboats."
And § 4444 is as follows:
"No state or municipal government shall impose upon pilots of
steam vessels any obligation to procure a state or other license in
addition to that issued by the United States, or any other
regulation which will impede such pilots in the performance of the
duties required by this title, nor shall any pilot charges be
levied by any such authority upon any steamer piloted as provided
by this title, and in no case shall the fees charged for the
pilotage of any steam vessel exceed the customary or legally
established rates in the state where the same is performed. Nothing
in this title shall be construed to annul or affect any regulation
established by the laws of any state
Page 118 U. S. 96
requiring vessels entering or leaving a port in any such state,
other than coastwise steam vessels, to take a pilot duly licensed
or authorized by the laws of any such state or of a state situate
upon the waters of such state."
According to the agreed case, the
Saxon was a coastwise
seagoing steam vessel, was not sailing under register, and at the
time when the defendant in error tendered his services and
subsequently when she passed up the river into Savannah, was under
the control and direction of a pilot licensed by the United States
inspectors of steamboats. She was therefore at the time piloted as
provided by that title of the statute, so that she was lawfully
exempt from any pilot charges levied by any state or municipal
government. The section expressly excepts coastwise steam vessels
from the regulations established by the laws of any state requiring
vessels entering or leaving a port in any such state to take a
pilot duly licensed or authorized by the laws of any such state or
of a state situate upon the waters of such state. The owners of the
Saxon were therefore at liberty to employ any pilot,
licensed under the authority of the United States for the
particular service in which he was engaged, without regard to the
provisions of the Georgia Code requiring it to accept the services
of the pilot first tendered, or, in case of refusal, to pay
pilotage therefor. The engagement of the services of the pilot
actually taken by previous contract was equivalent to keeping him
on board for that purpose during the whole voyage, as he was, in
fact under pay from its commencement, and had he been actually on
board at the time the defendant in tendered himself as pilot, we
think the right of the vessel to reject the offer could not have
been reasonably questioned.
For these reasons the judgment of the Supreme Court of Georgia
is
Reversed and the cause is remanded with instructions to take
further proceedings therein according to law and in conformity with
this opinion.